1 x Zorro (III ?)1 x (inactive?) 16bit ISA 1 x (inactive?) 32bit PCINOTE:
It is not clear whether these are the actual slots, or whether a riser
card containing slots was designed to be plugged into them. This seems
more likely.

Standard CHIP RAM:

2MB (Surface Mounted)

RAM sockets:

2 x 72pin SIMM slots.

Hard Drive Controllers:

1 x 3.5" IDE Controller

Drive Bays:

1 x 5.25" (with faceplate)1 x 3.5" (with faceplate)NOTE: More bays may exist, but this is not certain

1 x Internal "1.44MB/1.76MB" Drive.NOTE: It is unknown if this drive was configured to read Amiga formatted disks

Motherboard Revisions:

Unknown

Battery Backed Up Clock:

Yes

When Escom took over the Amiga operation after Commodore's demise, in
addition to re-releasing the A1200 and the A4000T, they also designed a
totally a new Amiga. This Amiga was known as the "Walker" throughout
it's development stage, although it is not known if this name would be
kept had the machine been released. Unfortunately this machine was
never released due to Escom going bankrupt and subsequently their Amiga
Technologies subsiduary. At least two prototypes exist and were housed
at the Amiga International Inc. HQ, Langen, Germany although it is
unknown if they still reside there. Petro (a now ex-Amiga Internation
Inc employee) is seen demonstrating them in a 1999 Amiga OS 3.5
promotional video.

Toni was the "system controller" and
implemented for example, the DRAM interface. The FPGA used on the
prototypes had a few frequency problems and were not completely stable
at 33MHz. The motherboard contained a SuperIO chip and a Dallas Clock,
aside from the "Toni" custom chip (really an FPGA). The original
prototypes did not contain the Dallas clock due to some kind of
hardware problem not found before CeBIT (a show where the Walker was
demoed). Unfortunately much of the software side for driving the
hardware remains undeveloped as Escom went into liquidation before it
could be completed. Several Walker units were built but only two were
ever placed in the stylised black case. The 3rd Walker shown at the
CeBIT show was in a standard PC tower as the motherboard was Baby AT
form factor. The Motorola Coldfire processors had been considered as an
option for the Walker however this idea was dropped rather quickly.
Although the Coldfire's share a lot on common with the coventional 68k
series of processors, they are not entirely compatible. The earlier
designs used an 030@33Mhz whilst the "production" version would have
used an EC030@40Mhz. This would have meant that the final version would
be lacking an MMU but as this is rarely used on the Amiga, the cost
reduction and speed increase was considered more beneficial. The Walker
used Kickstart 3.2 in a 1MB ROM (most Amiga's use 1 x 512K ROMS, 2 x
256K ROMs with some exceptions) and contained various upgrades to the
OS such as partitions larger than 2GB, hard drives larger than 4GB and
a revamped CD Filing System as well as Workbench 3.2 (V43.1).

As a side note, many of these fixes and a lot more were resolved at the
release of AmigaOS3.5 (which still uses Kickstart 3.1).